Pumpkin Bakes: Cool Weather Treats for Chickens - Backyard Poultry (2024)

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Make these stuffed pumpkin treats for chickens this fall. These pumpkin bakes are a great source of nutrition and enrichment for your flock.

Did you know that there are many pumpkin treats chickens will love to eat during the cooler weather? As summer turns to fall, it’s a great time to store up a few extra pumpkins. Set these aside in a cool, dry location and you will be able to make some pumpkin treats chickens will love and go crazy over, as the weather turns chilly.

Chickens Love Treats!

If you have a flock of chickens, you understand how happy they are when you bring treats. Treats are fun for us too. We can watch their antics as they devour the special delicacy. When we use this opportunity to bring a nutrient-rich food, it makes us feel like we are creating an even healthier life for our chickens.

It’s fun to be creative in the kitchen. Taking scraps of leftovers, bits of herbs and produce from the garden, and combining it with the normal grains or layer ration is creative. I enjoy putting together a large pan of treats based on what we have in the refrigerator, garden, or kitchen compost pail.

Pumpkin Bakes: Cool Weather Treats for Chickens - Backyard Poultry (1)

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Gardening provides us with many treats for the flock. As the season winds down, or when you shop the farmers market, be on the lookout for a good price on small pumpkins. Pumpkins store easily in a cool, dry space and provide great nutrition for the flock during the winter months. Adding extras to the pumpkin puree brings the treat to a new level of chicken treat!

Pumpkin Treats for Chickens that They’ll Love for Cold Weather

Cold weather is the appropriate time for feeding extra energy foods like corn, winter squash, and pumpkins. Corn is easy to obtain and mix into any combination of foods that are safe for chickens to eat. Pumpkins are another valuable food for cold weather. High in vitamins and nutrition, putting away a few pumpkins when they are in season keeps this nutrient-rich food available through the winter.

My new book, 50 Do it Yourself Projects for Keeping Chickens, Skyhorse Publishing 2018, has quite a few recipes that will make your flock extra happy. Below is one of the pumpkin recipes from the book.

Easy Pumpkin Storage

Pumpkins will last a long time in a cool, dry environment such as a root cellar. You can try some of the ways to mimic a root cellar’s conditions using items such as buried trash cans or coolers. Or, you can cook the pumpkin and store the flesh in the freezer until you need it. Even the guts and seeds from the pumpkin can be stored in the freezer. Here’s how:

Preheat the oven to 325 degrees F

Line a baking sheet with foil

Slice the pumpkin in half (Scoop out all the guts and seeds and store separately in the freezer or feed to the flock now)

Place the two sides, cut side down, on the foil covered pan

Roast the pumpkin in the oven for 30 to 45 minutes. Test for doneness by sticking a fork into the rind. If the fork penetrates into the flesh easily, the pumpkin is cooked.

Remove the pan from the oven and let cool

Once you can touch it safely, remove the outer skin. Cut up the pumpkin flesh and store in the freezer in containers or freezer bags.

Now to make the pumpkin treats chickens will love!

Stuffed Pumpkin Treats for Chickens

1 medium-sized pumpkin, cut in half

16 oz. cooked pumpkin purée from another pumpkin (or one can of pumpkin purée — not pie filling)

½ cup oatmeal

½ cup mealworms

¼ cup flax seed

¼ cup sunflower seeds

Handful of fresh herbs, chopped — reserve a few sprigs for garnish if desired

You can also add raisins and any other dry treats to the mix.

Scoop out the guts and some of the pumpkin flesh. Save the pumpkin shells. Cut up the long strings of guts. Place the goop on a foil-lined baking sheet. Roast at 325 degrees F for 20 minutes.

Mix all the ingredients together in a large bowl. Pour/scoop into the hollowed out pumpkin halves.

Serve to your flock! Let me know in the comments if this is a recipe for pumpkin treats that your chickens love.

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Pumpkin Bakes: Cool Weather Treats for Chickens - Backyard Poultry (2024)

FAQs

Can chickens eat too much pumpkin? ›

Give them one pumpkin every other day, not one pumpkin three times a day. Ingesting large quantities of pumpkin—or of any treat—creates an imbalance in your flocks' diet, as the chickens will be too full to eat their feed and will thus miss out on nutrients necessary for their health and development.

What frozen treats are good for chickens? ›

Take some chopped fruit and/or vegetables and spread it among an ice cube tray. You can also mash up some of the fruit to make a juice that helps all the chop stick together. When the treats are frozen, pop them out and serve to chickens on a tray of some sort.

How to give pumpkin to chickens? ›

Your chickens can eat the pumpkins raw or cooked. They won't mind either way. I usually cut (or break) my pumpkin in half. When I first started, I just set a pumpkin out in the run and waited for them to dive in.

Can chickens eat the outside of a pumpkin? ›

Yes! Pumpkins are not only safe for chickens to eat, but they love eating them, too. Chickens will peck at the rind, flesh, leaves, and seeds. All the parts of a pumpkin are safe for a chicken to eat, but the rind and flesh are the most popular.

Does pumpkin prevent worms in chickens? ›

But don't rely on pumpkin seeds to stop your chickens getting worms. The studies suggest that while pumpkin seeds or extracts might have a small preventative effect, they are not enough to actually de-worm chickens or stop the need for de-wormers. It's not worth the risk when your chickens' health is on the line.

How to hang a pumpkin for chickens? ›

You don't have to take off all the skin, just enough for your chickens to be able to access the insides. Every coop layout is different, but find a beam, hook, or other mechanism to hang your pumpkin from. Make sure it is about 6 to 12 inches off the ground for the best access. That's it!

Can you give chickens treats everyday? ›

Flock Management : Layer Nutrition

Patrick Biggs, Ph. D. Healthy chicken treats can be fed in moderation along with a complete chicken feed. Be sure to follow the 90/10 rule – offer 90% complete feed to a maximum of 10% treats each day.

What to feed chickens in the summer? ›

During summer, you'll want to limit the amount of scratch grains you feed. The high amounts of corn found in scratch can increase their body heat production, and make them feel even hotter in summer. Instead, encourage your chickens to scratch and forage by giving them leafy greens, grass, weeds, or dandelions.

Can I feed my chickens Gatorade? ›

Plain Pedialyte or Gatorade is an option for your chickens, or you can mix up your own homemade electrolytes using things you already have in your kitchen.

How to deworm chickens naturally? ›

Crush a couple of garlic cloves, skin and all, per bird and put them into a sock. Hang this in the water bucket and add a generous splosh of apple cider vinegar (proper live stuff with the mother). The garlic is for the worms, and the ACV for healthy guts. Its great to combine the two treatments together.

Can chickens eat baked pumpkin skin? ›

Your birds will eat the entire pumpkin, from the skin to the insides, leaving just the rough stump of the stem. If you have pumpkins that you set out for decoration and didn't carve, you can cut these open and feed them to your chickens as well.

Can chickens eat cucumbers? ›

Yes. Cucumbers are an excellent chicken snack. Loaded with vitamins, minerals, and fiber, these water-rich veggies make especially good treats during hot summers. Chickens can eat the cucumber skin as well, but often times they usually just eat the middle flesh of the cucumber.

Can chickens eat pumpkin leaves and stems? ›

BACKYARD CHICKENS LOVE PUMPKIN

Yes, pumpkin leaves, seeds, guts and all parts of the pumpkin are edible and healthy feed for you animals. Pumpkins provide great benefits to your livestock and farm animals. These are just a few. They are high in fibre.

Can chickens eat bananas? ›

Bananas - Chickens can eat bananas in moderation, and they provide potassium and vitamins. Watermelon - A refreshing treat for chickens and this is my flock's favorite! Watermelon seeds are also fine for chickens to eat. Peaches - Remove the pit and offer small amounts of peach flesh as a treat.

Can chickens eat pumpkin soup? ›

Blend it all in the food processor and add enough plain unflavored yogurt to achieve a 'soupy' consistency. Then pour some soup into each pumpkin half, garnish it with shredded carrot and serve it up ! Our chickens clearly love it! And when they are done with the soup they will eat the bowl!

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